Transcript Weathering
Weathering
Weathering is the breaking down
of rocks and other materials on
the earth’s surface
Two Types of Weathering
1) Mechanical/physical weathering
No change in the rock’s chemical
composition.
Agents of mechanical weathering include:
Temperature: causes repeated
expansion and contraction
1) Mechanical/physical weathering
Ice wedging (frost action, freeze-thaw
cycle): when liquid water goes into
cracks and then freezes causing the
cracks to get wider
Organic activity (root-pry, burrowing
animals, human activities)
Gravity: rocks falling and colliding
with other rocks
Abrasion: wearing away by solid
particles
Wind-blown Sand
Unloading: the expanding of high
pressure rock when exposed to a
lower pressure
Classic sheeted granite
along the Tioga Road,
Yosemite National Park.
The granite is broken
into gently dipping plates
by unloading joints.
Unloading joints probably
form as the rock is
exposed by erosion.
These joints, and others
that are more steeply
oriented, provide
pathways for water to
enter the rock.
Exfoliation or unloading rock breaks off into leaves or sheets
along joints which parallel the ground
surface;
caused by expansion of rock due to uplift
and erosion; removal of pressure of deep
burial
Contraction due to crystallization
The surface pattern on this
pedestal rock is honeycomb
weathering, caused by salt
crystallisation. This example is
at Yehliu, Taiwan.
Salt
weathering
of building
stone on the
island of
Gozo, Malta
2) Chemical weathering
The altering of the composition of minerals
within a rock that results in a reduction in
size.
Agents of chemical weathering include:
Water: Dissolves minerals out of rocks
making them weaker
Chemical weathering
Acid: Dissolves minerals in rocks (examples:
carbonic acid, acid rain, and plant acid)
Lichens such as
these growing on the
rocks in the picture
can produce weak
acids that react with
the rock.
3000 year old Egyptian Obelisk
3000 year old Egyptian Obelisk
after 100 years in NY
The Parthenon in Greece shows discoloration and
chemical weathering effects from air pollution and
acid rain.
Chemical weathering
Oxidation: Oxygen combines with iron
minerals and sulfur minerals changing the
composition of the rock
Oxidation turned these rocks in
Nevada's Valley of Fire red.
Factors that determine the rate of weathering:
o Composition
o Physical conditions of rock
Cracks, holes, crevices – easier
weathering
Solid, unbroken – more weather
resistant
Climate:
Cold Climates– mechanical
weathering breaks down rocks rapidly
Warm, wet climates – chemical
weathering breaks down rocks rapidly
o Topography: the position of the rock
o Air pollution
o Exposure time
o Surface area exposed
Mechanical and chemical
weathering work together
Weathering by Brainpop
1) How long does the weathering process take?
2) What is carbonic acid a mixture of?
3) What kind of rocks are formed by weathering?